Contact Your Financial Adviser Money Making MC
28 November 2017
Thailand daily life(The Total Investment & Insurance
Solutions)
|
The world economy is growing faster than it has in seven years and more
and more people are working — but the high growth isn't expected to last long,
and wages remain stubbornly stagnant. The
Total Investment & Insurance Solutions
That's according to forecasts Tuesday from the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development, which urged governments to do more to ensure
longer-term growth and better living standards across the board.
The group, which recommends policies for leading economies, predicts
sustained growth in the U.S. this year and next and a sharper-than-expected
increase in the countries that use the euro currency.
For 2019, however, the OECD forecasts "a tempering of growth rather
than continued strengthening." The
Total Investment & Insurance Solutions
Chief Economist Catherine Mann urged faster re-training of workers amid
drastic technological changes, extending retirement ages, investing in
renewable energy and simplified tax rules to reduce risks of a new downturn.
"We've got wind under the wings but we're flying low," she
said at the OECD headquarters in Paris.
The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions
The agency slightly raised its global growth forecast to 3.6 percent
this year — the highest since the post-crisis upturn in 2010 — thanks to rising
industrial production, trade and technology spending.
But that "remains modest by past standards," the OECD said.
Globally, it forecasts 3.7 percent growth next year with a slight drop
to 3.6 percent in 2019. The Total
Investment & Insurance Solutions
In the United States, the OECD inched up its outlook, predicting 2.2
percent growth this year and 2.5 percent in 2018 thanks to "buoyant asset
prices and strong business and consumer confidence." It expects U.S.
growth to fall back to 2.1 percent in 2019. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions
The OECD cautioned that its forecasts are clouded by uncertainty over
President Donald Trump's tax policies and risks of protectionist trade moves.
Trump campaigned to protect manufacturing jobs in the U.S. and renegotiate
international trade deals he sees as unfair.
The long-troubled eurozone enjoyed another boost as the OECD became the
latest group to raise its forecasts for the 19-country region. Tuesday's report
foresees 2.4 percent growth this year and 2.1 percent for next year, but
predicted growth will sink back below 2 percent in 2019.
The main trouble spot is Britain, whose economy will continue to be
hobbled by uncertainty surrounding its exit from the European Union. Economic
growth "will continue to weaken" and be just above 1 percent in 2018
and 2019, it said.
Another big concern of the OECD: employment is rising across most rich
economies, but people's wages aren't.
"It's against intuition, it's against basic principles of
economics, and normally it should have been otherwise," OECD chief Angel Gurria
said. "Clearly growth has to be made more inclusive." The Total Investment & Insurance
Solutions
"The ongoing digital revolution should be unlocking efficiencies
and allowing workers to produce more," he said. But "nobody will be
able to produce more if they don't have the skills to get the most out of the
machine."
The report also warned of the risks of high corporate debt in China and
spiking housing prices in some U.S. cities and rising household debt.The Total Investment & Insurance Solution
No comments:
Post a Comment